News
Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search
News
First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni
News
Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend
News
Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library
News
Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty
If it is true that nobody likes a winner then the Harvard heavies have begun work on a new enemies list--because Saturday, the varsity methodically put away a Syracuse boat which was supposed to be tough, by a margin of two lengths over 1600 meters.
Bad winds forced movement of the course to the end of Lake Onondaga and a channel in front of the Syracuse boathouse. The rowers huddled against the bitter cold before the race but at the gun the Harvard juggernaut cut a swath through the choppy waters and never looked back.
The Crimson maintained a one-seat edge as it settled to 37 strokes a minute from its opening pace of 40. The Orangemen were rowing hard but lost further ground at the calm channel entrance when Harvard cox Jeff Rothstein called a power ten--an all-out sprint for ten strokes.
On the Deathbed
The shells brought down their strokes in the channel with Harvard in front by five seats. But the Crimson were just taking a breather while Syracuse was dying.
At 1000 meters, the Crimson eight responded with a power 20, slipping away from Syracuse and opening up a one-and-a-quarter length lead. The margin of victory at the finish was more than two lengths and eight seconds (5:24.5-5:33.0).
Warren Perkins, who watched from the dock with a sore shoulder (Jim Kenary replaced him at the number-four seat), called the varsity's performance "impressive," although he said he expected a stiffer challenge from Syracuse, fourth at last year's Eastern sprints.
Not Like California
"We're going a lot faster than in San Diego," Perkins said, adding that with more miles, there should be further improvement.
The other Harvard crews completed a Crimson sweep for the brisk day. The junior varsity came home with the widest margin of victory--three lengths--overpowering its Syracuse counterparts by 12 seconds, 5:17.2-5:29.3.
The freshman shells started the day and their season off with two wins. The first boat opened more than a length of open water at the finish, outdueling Syracuse, 5:29.0-5:40.2, and the second freshman crew took the closest race of the day, 5:37.5-5:39.6
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.